Immigration Deserves Airtime at Thursday’s Debate
If moderator Kristen Welker sticks to her script at Thursday night’s presidential debate, the subject of immigration will be off the table, again.
But the NBC newswoman’s six designated topics —fighting COVID-19, American families, race in America, climate change, nationalsecurity and leadership – offer opportunities for President Donald Trump andDemocratic challenger Joe Biden to talk about immigration at length.
National security, American families, race and leadership are inextricably tied to the subject. As Andrew Arthur of the Center for Immigration Studies noted, “Many if not all of those challenges are affected to one degree or another by our nation’s immigration policies.”
Welker’s leading topic, fighting COVID-19, has anobvious nexus to immigration. From the beginning of the outbreak, governmentrestrictions on foreign travel were designed to prevent the spread of the virusand to preserve limited medical resources for those already in the U.S.
“These restrictions have received insignificant notice among American voters, except from those who criticize the administration’s response generally, likely because they were effective and because few pay attention to risks that never came to fruition,” Arthur asserted.
Thursday night is an occasion for the president to hammer home the role that immigration policy plays in connection to health, national security and family, as well as jobs and the economy.
Biden’s supporters reportedly are eager for their candidate to discuss immigration. “We should be talking about immigration in the context of the response and recovery to COVID-19,” Ali Noorani, president of the nonpartisan National Immigration Forum, told Newsweek.
By all means, let’s hear it. Such a discussion,however, could effectively expose Biden as a captive of his party’sincreasingly radical positions on immigration.
“His running mate Kamala Harris wants to decriminalize illegal border crossing. Biden offers generous incentives for trespassers including taxpayer-funded healthcare and amnesty. These policies would effectively vaporize our border,” Trump senior adviser Steven Cortes told Newsweek.
Political insiders can spin immigration talkingpoints all day long. Better to hear the candidates speak to the issue directlyon Thursday night. How about it, Ms. Welker?